Social Media

Thursday, 23 June 2011

Earlier this year Sony's Play Station Network was compromised and I got a nice email from Sony that sent me into a frantic round of password changing. Since then hacker attacks on vunerable websites have increased leading to much more media reporting and groups like Luiz Security and Anonymous becoming household names.

However just as alarming as massive corporations having obsolete servers and poor security is the fact that so much personal information about every one of us is already floating around the Internet. Just on your Facebook page you have the ability to share your date of birth, home town, mobile phone details and plenty other juicy identity theft morsels.

To be fair banks have been alive to the fact that questions like 'What is your mother's maiden name' and 'What is your date of birth' are insufficient as security questions for the last few years (as this report from 2007 shows) and have started to move towards different types of authentication. Yet the first barrier to a hacker gaining access to your online banking or other services is still your password and this quite often tends to be made up of memorable such as your dog's name + your year of birth. For those worried about this sort of thing consider a password manager like Keepass or use a random method like Dicewise for generating your passwords.

So to protect our identity rather than complex security maybe we should start posting disinformation about ourselves to throw would be identity thieves off the scent. Since I have already given you too many true titbit of info about myself today (I have a Playstation and a computer) I should muddy the waters a little. So here are a few personal nuggets of information about myself:

My birthday is May 28th (like the Queen).

I am 27.

I was born in Butte Falls, Oregon (population 431)

My mother's maiden name was 'Mummy'

My first school was Grange Hill

My favourite colour is Aqua Marine

I have a dog called Brutus

The Spartacus gag came to mind when I thought of Identity Theft. Spartacus (whose real name was Kirk Douglas) lead an unsuccessful slave revolt against Rome and made a film where all his friends pretended to assume his identity and didn't empty his bank account.

About Me

I have doodled since I was a child. Even though I annotated all my lecture notes with cartoons I have an IT degree and have worked as a programmer for many years. As well as cartooning I enjoy painting, writing, decorating cakes, Photoshop and all sorts of other creative activities. Please email me at andrewfraser73@googlemail.com if you are interested in reproducing any of the material from this site. Keep up to date with new cartoons using the Atom feed or follow me on twitter (cartoonsidrew)